Sunday, November 19, 2023

Colman Domingo in RUSTIN

In the first ten minutes of Steven Spielberg's LINCOLN, we see Daniel Day-Lewis as Abraham Lincoln talking to two Black soldiers on a Civil War battlefield. One of those soldiers was played by actor Colman Domingo. For his performance as Lincoln in that 2012 release, Daniel Day-Lewis won his third Oscar for Best Actor, Today, Colman Domingo is receiving well-deserved Best Actor Oscar buzz for his lead performance in a film that is also a biopic.

Domingo plays the brilliant, influential and greatly overlooked mentor to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Bayard Rustin was called "the Architect of the March on Washington" headed by Dr. King in 1963. That's where King made his historic "I have a dream" speech. 

I am admittedly old enough to recall being a little boy and watching the March on Washington with my parents when it was a live telecast on CBS. I remember seeing tall, slim Bayard Rustin with his salt and pepper hair and wearing horn-rimmed glasses speak forcefully and passionately and then stand behind Dr. King. In my adult years, I learned that he was highly-educated, a Quaker, a singer of spirituals who had recorded albums and performed on Broadway, an outspoken Civil Rights activist -- and an openly gay man in the days when one could be arrested for simply having a cocktail in a gay bar.  When I learned that fact, I realized why the famous Rustin became a very minor character -- if seen at all -- in modern-day biopics about Dr. King and the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s. For all his achievements and contributions, Rustin had been pushed into the shadows because of his sexuality.  Back in July 2020, I blogged a post about our need for a Bayard Rustin biopic. Well...now we have one, And it was worth waiting for. Barack and Michelle Obama are executive producers. It was directed by George C. Wolfe. Actor Colman Domingo gives an extraordinary performance as the controversial and complicated American activist. Domingo commands the screen and seems to have been born to play Bayard Rustin. He did his homework extremely well. Also, he's made Hollywood history. He is an openly gay Black actor playing an openly gay Black historical figure.RUSTIN is in theaters and now on Netflix. This is a remarkable, stirring must-see biopic. 


Glynn Turman, Jeffrey Wright, CCH Pounder and, in a dramatic role, Chris Rock co-star. This is a film that our LGBTQ community needs to see and support. As for Mr. Colman Domingo, I am so proud of him and I add to the praise that he deserves to be an Oscar nominee for Best Actor.

Saturday, November 11, 2023

Dear Eddie Muller of TCM...

...We all make mistakes. That written, I must disagree politely with something you said on TCM back in July. It's in a clip that I viewed this morning on the Turner Classic Movies: TCM page on Facebook.

Eddie is a noted author, a film noir historian and an extremely popular, dapper host of film noir classics that air weekly on TCM. (My aunt back in L.A. loves him.) Occasionally, he's pulled from out of the film noir shadows of TCM's Noir Alley on weekends to introduce something brighter. Such is the case when, back in July, he hosted films selected by guest programmer, Shari Belafonte. One of her selections was the 1950 comedy, HARVEY, starring James Stewart and Josephine Hull as his character's ditzy sister, Hull won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress. About that win, Eddie Muller said: "The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences never gives Oscars for comedy performances. They don't."

If I had been a TCM segment producer working on those segments, I would have gracefully edited that statement out before it aired to his benefit -- and I would have, also gracefully, explained why to Mr. Muller.

The same year Josephine Hull won her Best Supporting Actress Oscar for HARVEY, Judy Holliday won the Best Actress Oscar for BORN YESTERDAY.



Some other actors who took home Hollywood gold for performances in film comedies are --

Walter Matthau, Best Supporting Actor for Billy Wilder's THE FORTUNE COOKIE

Goldie Hawn, Best Supporting Actress for CACTUS FLOWER

Lee Marvin, Best Actor for the comedy western CAT BALLOU


Glenda Jackson, Best Actress for A TOUCH OF CLASS


Julie Andrews, Best Actress for the musical comedy MARY POPPINS

Barbra Streisand, Best Actress for the musical comedy FUNNY GIRL

George Burns, Best Supporting Actor for Neil Simon's THE SUNSHINE BOYS

Maggie Smith, Best Supporting Actress for Neil Simon's CALIFORNIA SUITE

Richard Dreyfuss, Best Actor for Neil Simon's THE GOODBYE GIRL


Diane Keaton, Best Actress for Woody Allen's ANNIE HALL


Dianne Wiest, Best Supporting Actress for Woody Allen's HANNAH AND HER SISTERS

Dianne Wiest, Best Supporting Actress for Woody Allen's BULLETS OVER BROADWAY


Mira Sorvino, Best Supporting Actress for Woody Allen's MIGHTY APHRODITE

Kevin Kline, Best Supporting Actor for A FISH CALLED WANDA

Sir John Gielgud, Best Supporting Actor for ARTHUR                                                                    

Olympia Dukakis, Best Supporting Actress for MOONSTRUCK

Cher, Best Actress for MOONSTRUCK


...and Whoopi Goldberg, Best Supporting Actress for GHOST


There you have it. Some actors who got laughs and then got Oscars for their work.


Colman Domingo in RUSTIN

In the first ten minutes of Steven Spielberg's LINCOLN, we see Daniel Day-Lewis as Abraham Lincoln talking to two Black soldiers on a Ci...